Scaling up Renewable Energy Assets: Issuing Green Bond via Structured Public-Private Collaboration for Managing Risk in an Emerging Economy
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Challenges in Scaling up Renewable Energy Assets
1.2. Impetus in Developing and Financing Wind Power under China’s Market Socialism
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Policy and Practice Review
2.1.1. Green Bond Development for Global Sustainability
2.1.2. Green Financing Policy under a Political Economy
2.1.3. China’s Emerging Green Financial System
Elements | Products and Services | Policy Tools | Pertinent Stakeholders |
---|---|---|---|
Green Credit | Commercial banks providing financing for ecological protection, ecological construction, a low-carbon economy and green industry through a credit mode | In 2012, the China Banking Regulatory Commission (CBRC) issued the Green Credit Guidelines for the key evaluation indicators for the implementation of green credits; and the green credit policies formulated by commercial banks themselves. | Commercial banks, business enterprises |
Green Bonds | Corporate bonds issued specifically to support green projects | In 2015, the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) issued the “Green Bond Support Project Catalog”. In 2015, the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) issued the guidelines on the issuance of green bonds. | Commercial banks, state banks, |
Green Stock Index | Stock price index for green stock selection among listed companies according to specific criteria | In 2015, the Shanghai Stock Exchange officially released a Carbon Efficiency Index. | Listed companies, individual and institutional investors |
Green Funds | Special investment funds established for energy savings and emissions reduction strategies, low-carbon economic development and environmental optimization and transformation projects | In 2015/16, the Ministry of Finance, PBOC and other ministries jointly released the Guidelines for Establishing the Green Financial System. | Local governments, business enterprises, investment funds, private capital |
Green Insurance | Also known as environmental pollution liability insurance, targeting the risk of enterprise pollution and related accidents caused by damage to third parties in accordance with the law to bear such liability | In 2017, the Ministry of Environmental Protection and the China Insurance Regulatory Commission (CIRC) jointly released the “Guidance on Environmental Pollution Liability Insurance” and the “Guiding Opinions on the Pilot Work of Compulsory Liability Insurance for Environmental Pollution”. The administrative measures on compulsory liability insurance for environmental pollution were issued as a draft. | Insurance companies, business enterprises |
2.1.4. Green Bond Characteristics
2.1.5. Knowledge Gap
2.2. Case Study
3. Results
3.1. Pioneering Public-Private Initiative
3.2. Structured Financial Arrangement
3.3. Bundled Wind Power Assets
3.4. Generating Carbon Trading Income from Wind Power Projects
4. Discussion
4.1. Leveraging on a Strong Credit Rating
4.2. Investor Risk Protection and Incentives
4.3. Financing Renewable Energy in Scale to Reduce Carbon Emissions
4.4. Work in Progress
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Issuer | China-Guangzhou Nuclear Wind Power Co., Ltd. (CGNWP) |
---|---|
Release time | 12 May 2014 |
Release size | 1 billion yuan |
Term | 5 years |
Interest rate | 5.65% (fixed), plus 5–20 bp (floating) |
Release method | Public offerings |
Principal underwriter/co-principal underwriter | Pudong Development Bank/China Development Bank |
Rating agency | United Credit Evaluation Co., Ltd. |
Financial advisors | China-Guangzhou Nuclear Financial Co., Ltd.; Shenzhen Emission Rights Exchange |
Basic assets | Issuer’s subordinate project company, sales revenue and income from carbon assets generated from 5 wind power projects |
Issue pricing mechanism | The pricing method of fixed interest plus additional income is used, in which the sales revenue generated from the wind power project is used to repay the principal and fixed interest of the asset-backed instruments, and the income from the carbon assets generated by the wind power project is used to pay the additional benefits attributable to the investors with reference to the asset support notes. |
Geographical Location of Wind Power Assets | Installed Capacity | Annual Power Supply | Online Electricity Tariff | Regional Power Purchasers |
---|---|---|---|---|
Inner Mongolia | 49.3 MW | 110,751 MWh | 0.51 yuan/kwh | Inner Mongolia Electric Power (Group) Company |
Inner Mongolia | 49.5 MW | 131,564 MWh | 0.51 yuan/kwh | Inner Mongolia Electric Power (Group) Company |
Xinjiang | 49.5 MW | 122,364 MWh | 0.58 yuan/kwh | Xinjiang Electric Power Company |
Gansu | 49.5 MW | 91,130 MWh | 0.58 yuan/kwh | Gansu Electric Power Company |
Guangdong | 35.7 MW | 61,740 MWh | 0.61 yuan/kWh | Jiangmen Power Supply Bureau of Guangdong Grid Company |
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Fu, J.; Ng, A.W. Scaling up Renewable Energy Assets: Issuing Green Bond via Structured Public-Private Collaboration for Managing Risk in an Emerging Economy. Energies 2021, 14, 3076. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14113076
Fu J, Ng AW. Scaling up Renewable Energy Assets: Issuing Green Bond via Structured Public-Private Collaboration for Managing Risk in an Emerging Economy. Energies. 2021; 14(11):3076. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14113076
Chicago/Turabian StyleFu, Jingyan, and Artie W. Ng. 2021. "Scaling up Renewable Energy Assets: Issuing Green Bond via Structured Public-Private Collaboration for Managing Risk in an Emerging Economy" Energies 14, no. 11: 3076. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14113076
APA StyleFu, J., & Ng, A. W. (2021). Scaling up Renewable Energy Assets: Issuing Green Bond via Structured Public-Private Collaboration for Managing Risk in an Emerging Economy. Energies, 14(11), 3076. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14113076